Now that the dust has settled, maybe we can discuss the 92 page ruling.
Note. All quotes, numbers, come from the below link.
https://ag.ny.gov/sites/default/file...p-decision.pdf
From the "Summary" section.
"The accountants created these “compilations” based on data submitted by the Trump entities. In order to borrow more and at lower rates, defendants submitted blatantly false financial data to the accountants, resulting in fraudulent financial statements. When confronted at trial with the statements, defendants’ fact and expert witnesses simply denied reality, and defendants failed to accept responsibility or to impose internal controls to prevent future recurrences."
First off, the trial covered 10 years of activities, The fine reflects that time frame. The fine reflects the amount of money (damages) generated by the fraud or the ill gotten gains (IGG).
If the IGG is a large number, the fine will be a large number. The claims the fine is excessive and will be reduced on appeal isn't a sure thing by any means. Over 10 years, the amount of IGG is very high. $355 mil is only excessive if it is more than the IGG realized.
In this case, IGGs are the damages. It doesn't matter that the banks were repaid.
From "The Trial" section.
"The eleven-week trial of this action addressed whether defendants are liable pursuant to the second through seventh causes of action and what monetary penalties and/or injunctive relief this Court should impose. Plaintiff is seeking “disgorgement” of “ill-gotten gains,” and to limit defendants’ abilities to conduct business in New York.
Constitutional provisions guaranteeing a jury trial, such as the Seventh Amendment to the United States Constitution, apply only to cases “at common law,” so-called “legal” cases. The phrase “at common law” is used in contradistinction to cases that are “equitable” in nature. Whether a case is “legal” or “equitable” depends on the relief that plaintiff sought. Here, plaintiff seeks disgorgement and injunctions, each of which are forms of equitable relief. Thus, there was no right to a jury, and the case was “tried to the Court;” the Court being the sole factfinder and the sole “judge of credibility.”
Note: This footnote at bottom of page 6.
"3 In any event, neither party applied nor moved for a jury trial."
The fine was $355,000,000.
In this case, @127,000,000 of the fine comes from the profit on the sale of The Old Post Office.
@169,000,000 comes from $73,000,000 in saved interest on the Doral loan, $53,000,000 on The Old Post Office loan, @$17,000,000 on the trump Chicago loan, and @$24,000,000 on the 40 Wall Street loan for a total of @$169,000,000.
$60,000,000 in windfall profit from selling Ferry Point to Bally’s. Trump maintained the license agreement based on fraudulent financials and sold the license agreement to the Bally’s Corporation. Plus interest.
The mentioned loans had stipulations that trump had to maintain certain cash reserves and certain net worth figures. The fraud comes from trump inflating his net worth to receive favorable loan rates.
Example: "The Old Post Office guarantee explicitly stated that Trump’s representations were made “[i]n
order to induce Lender to accept this Guarant[ee] and to enter into the Loan Agreement and the
transactions thereunder,” and that loan obligations were “conclusively presumed to have been
created in reliance” on Trump’s guarantee and its representations. PX 305. This was confirmed
by the testimony of former and current Deutsche Bank employees Nicholas Haigh and David
Williams.
Pursuant to the personal guarantee, Donald Trump was required to “keep and maintain complete
and accurate books and records,” and to maintain $50 million in unencumbered liquidity and a
minimum net worth of $2.5 billion to be “tested and certified to on an annual basis based upon
the SFC delivered to Lender during each year.”
From page 76.
"In its summary judgment decision, this Court already found that the SFCs from 2014-2021 were false by material amounts as a matter of law. NYSCEF Doc. 1531 Indeed, materiality under this statute is judged not by reference to reliance by or materiality to a particular victim, but rather on whether the financial statement “properly reflected the financial condition” of the person to which the statement pertains. People v Essner, 124 Misc 2d 830, 835 (Sup Ct, NY County 1984) (“there need be no ‘victim,’ ergo, reliance is neither an element of the crime nor a valid yardstick with which to test the materiality of a false statement”).
Materiality has been one of the great red herrings of this case all along. Faced with clear evidence of a misstatement, a person can always shout that “it’s immaterial.” Absolute perfection, including with numbers, exists only in heaven. If fraud is insignificant, then, like most things in life, it just does not matter. As an ancient maxim has it, de minimis non curat lex,
the law is not concerned with trifles. Neither is this Court.
But that is not what we have here. Whether viewed in relative (percentage) or absolute (numerical) terms, objectively (the governing standard) or subjectively (how the lenders viewed them), defendants’ misstatements were material. United States Supreme Court Justice Potter Stewart famously, or infamously, declared that he could not define pornography, but that he knew it when he saw it. Jacobellis v State of Ohio, 378 US 184, 197 (1964). The frauds found here leap off the page and shock the conscience.
Wisely, courts have refused to define “material” in a “one size fits all” fashion. At trial, this Court attempted to get the experts to go where Courts have dared not tread. Not surprisingly, a firm definition could not be found. But in the present context, this Court confidently declares that any number that is at least 10% off could be deemed “material,” and any number that is at least 50% off would likely be deemed material. These numbers are probably conservative given that here, such deviations from truth represent hundreds of millions of dollars, and in the case of Mar-a-Lago, possibly a billion dollars or more."
From page 66
"Mar-a-Lago
In 1995, Donald Trump signed a “Deed of Conservation and Preservation” in which he gave up the right to use Mar-a-Lago for any purpose other than as a social club (the “1995 Deed”). In 2002, Donald Trump granted a conservation easement to the National Trust for Historic Preservation and signed a deed in which, in addition to conveying the rights to develop or use Mar-a-Lago for any purpose other than a social club, the Deed further “limits changes to the Property including, without limitation, the division or subdivision of the Property for any purpose, including use as single family homes, the interior renovation of the mansion, which may be necessary and desirable for the sale of the property as a single family residential estate, the construction of new buildings and the obstruction of open vistas.” NYSCEF Doc. No. 1531
at 25-26 (emphasis added).
In exchange for executing the 2002 Deed, in which he gave away, in perpetuity, the right to develop or use the property as a single-family residence, Donald Trump paid significantly lower property taxes on Mar-a-Lago. PX 1730; TT 3533-3535.
McConney had in his possession, since at least 2011, a copy of the 2002 Deed, restricting the use of Mar-a-Lago as a single-family residence. TT 773-775; PX 1013; DX 360. McConney was also aware, when he prepared the SFCs supporting data, that the entire basis of the valuations of Mar-a-Lago rested on the premise that it could be sold as a private residence to an individual.
Each and every year, he valued Mar-a-Lago as if it could be sold as a single-family residence, notwithstanding the deeded prohibitions against such use in perpetuity. TT 759, 775.
Further, when Patrick Birney took over for McConney in preparing the valuations for the SFCs, Weisselberg and McConney both concealed from Birney the 1995 and 2002 deeds. TT 1258- 1259. When valuing Mar-a-Lago on the SFCs from 2016-2021, McConney and Weisselberg selected comparables for Birney to use that were exclusively for private residences. TT 1248- 1256, 1268-1282; see, e.g., PX 3026.
There is no legal gray area surrounding the permanent nature of the deed restrictions. PX 1013. Accordingly, there can be no mistake that Donald Trump’s valuation of Mar-a-Lago from 2011-
2021 was fraudulent."
And so it goes.
Several people claim they have read the entire ruling. Their arguments show they skimmed it at best. The "all the loans were repaid" and the "Mar-a-largo is worth a billion dollars" people need to reread and reevaluate (repeat as necessary) what they thought they read.
Counting on winning an appeal seems to me to be wishful thinking. Letting trump keep his IGGs is not an option either. He is a con man and shouldn't be rewarded.